Publications

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Alternative cancer treatments

This is what medicine would say :

Alternative cancer treatments describes alternative and complementary treatments for cancer that have not been approved by the government agencies responsible for the regulation of therapeutic goods. 

They include diet and exercise, chemicals, herbs, devices, and manual procedures. 

The treatments may be untested or unsupported by evidence, either because no proper testing has been conducted, or because testing did not demonstrate statistically significant efficacy. 

Concerns have been raised about the safety of some of them.

Alternative cancer treatments are typically contrasted with experimental cancer treatments, which are treatments for which experimental testing is currently underway. 

All currently approved chemotherapeutic cancer treatments were considered experimental cancer treatments before their safety and efficacy testing was completed.

Such therapies can be categorized broadly into three groups: alternative treatments offered as a substitute to standard medical treatment; alternative treatments as an addition to standard treatment; and treatments proposed in the past that have been found in clinical trials to be useless and/or unsafe. 

Some of these obsolete or disproven treatments continue to be promoted, sold, and used.

Since the 1.940s, medical science has developed chemotherapy, radiation therapy, adjuvant therapy and the newer targeted therapies, as well as refining surgical techniques for removing cancer. 

Before the development of these modern, evidence-based treatments, 90% of cancer patients died within five years.

With modern mainstream treatments, only 34% of cancer patients die within five years.

However, while generally prolonging life or permanently curing cancer, most effective, mainstream forms of cancer treatment have side effects ranging from unpleasant to fatal, and permanent cures are not guaranteed. 

These side effects and the uncertainty of success create appeal for alternative treatments for cancer, which purport to cause fewer side effects or to increase survival rates.

Alternative cancer treatments have typically not undergone properly conducted, well-designed clinical trials. 

Among those that have been published, the methodology is often poor. 

A 2.006 systematic review of 214 articles covering 198 clinical trials of alternative cancer treatments concluded that almost none conducted dose-ranging studies, which are necessary to ensure that the patients are being given a useful amount of the treatment.

These kinds of treatments appear and vanish frequently, and have throughout history.

Complementary versus alternative treatments

Complementary and alternative cancer treatments are often grouped together, but this grouping is controversial.

Definitions vary, but generally speaking, the same methods that are called "complementary" when given alongside mainstream treatments are "alternative" when they are not.

Thus it is not the specific treatment, per se, that is actually "complementary" or "alternative", but the context in which it is used. 

Complementary therapies receive more support within the mainstream medical community than alternative treatments.

Complementary treatments are used in conjunction with proven mainstream treatments. 

They tend to be pleasant for the patient, not involve substances with any pharmacological effects, inexpensive, and intended to treat side effects rather than to kill cancer cells.

Medical massage and self-hypnosis to treat pain are examples of complementary treatments. 

A 2.006 systematic review of the effectiveness of complementary techniques in reducing pain concluded that although several seemed promising, conclusive evidence was lacking.

Alternative treatments, by contrast, are used in place of mainstream treatments. 

The most popular alternative cancer therapies are various, generally strict diets, including the macrobiotic diet. 

Other therapies include mind-body interventions, bioelectromagnetics, nutritional supplements, and herbs.

The popularity and prevalence of different treatments varies widely by region.

People who choose alternative treatments

People who choose alternative treatments tend to believe that evidence-based medicine is ineffective, while still believing that their own health could be improved.

They are impressed by physiological and other scientific-sounding information, prefer a healthcare model that treats the patient as an integrated, whole person, and are loyal to their alternative healthcare providers.

Cancer patients who choose complementary or alternative treatments in addition to conventional treatments believe themselves less likely to die than patients who choose only conventional treatments.

They feel a greater sense of control over their destinies, and report less anxiety and depression.

However, patients who use alternative treatments have a poorer survival time, even after controlling for type and stage of disease.

This may be because patients who accurately perceive that they are likely to survive do not attempt unproven remedies, and patients who accurately perceive that they are unlikely to survive are attracted to unproven remedies.

Among patients who believe their condition to be untreatable by evidence-based medicine, "desperation drives them into the hands of anyone with a promise and a smile."

Con artists have long exploited fear, ignorance, and desperation to strip dying people of their money, comfort, and dignity.

About half the practitioners who dispense complementary or alternative treatments are physicians, although they tend to be generalists rather than oncologists. 

As many as 60% of physicians have referred their patients to a complementary or alternative practitioner for some purpose.

Examples of alternative treatment

None of the cancer treatments on this list have substantial evidence for their effectiveness in treating cancer. 

Some have shown some benefits as complementary therapy, to reduce pain. 

Very few suppliers of alternative medicines have undertaken scientifically controlled clinical trials for their products, although occasional preliminary testing, or testing as adjuvant therapy, has been performed. 

For this reason, alternative therapies generally rely on testimonial or anecdotal evidence. 

In the United States, FDA regulations forbid the makers of unproven products from claiming efficacy against cancer.

Under investigation

Not to be confused with Experimental cancer treatment.

Quercetin

Vitamin C megadosage by intravenous infusion Oral vitamin C, regardless of dose, is disproven.

This is a type of redox therapy.

Medicinal mushrooms

Selenium (Selenomethionine and Se-methylselenocysteine)

Mistletoe extracts such as Iscador (may improve patient's quality of life)

Nanobees
Deoxycholic acid
Dichloroacetic acid
Curcumin
Milk thistle
Proton therapy

Mixed results
Coley's Toxins
Caesium chloride

Budwig diet, a diet emphasizing flaxseed oil, milk, fruits, vegetables, and fiber. More likely to be useful for preventing cancer rather than treating it.

Sodium Bicarbonate

Disproven or scientifically implausible

Chemical substances

Gonzalez regimen

Homeopathy (disproven), tiny amounts of substances, ritually diluted according to 18th century standards.

Laetrile (disproven), also known as B-17, is a cyanide-containing extract of crushed apricot pits.

Di Bella Multitherapy (disproven), a mixture of vitamins, melatonin, and other chemicals.

Emanuel Revici's catabolic/anabolic approach (disproven).

Hoxsey method (disproven), a caustic, escharotic paste of herbs and arsenic that is banned in the US as "worthless", "discredited" and "quackery".

714X, a water-based solution purported to kill "somatids", which the inventor claims cause disease.
Protocel and Cancell (disproven)
Krebiozen (disproven), purportedly diluted blood from horses.
Hydrazine sulfate, a toxic, synthetic drug.
Proteolytic enzyme therapy.
William Koch's "glyoxide antitoxin" (fraud), also called "recrystallized synthetic toxin", which proved to be distilled water.
Radio-Sulfo Brew, a poultice made of Limburger cheese (fraud).

Livingston-Wheeler, or Virginia Livingston's Progenitor cryptocides treatments, made from the patient's urine, to kill a non-existent bacteria claimed to be the cause of cancer.

Lawrence Burton's Immuno-Augmentative Therapy, claimed to energize the immune system.
Antineoplastons (disproven).
Chaparral.
Shark cartilage.
Escharotics such as Cansema or "black salve", usually a paste that kills any skin or tissue it is applied to.
Essiac tea (disproven).
Amygdalin
Diets
Gerson therapy (dangerous and disproven), a combination of diet and enemas.
Johanna Brandt's "Grape Cure" (scientifically implausible), a diet of water and grapes.
Beverly Hills diet (scientifically implausible), a largely fruitarian diet.
Macrobiotic diet (scientifically implausible), a primarily vegetarian diet with no refined or processed foods (may be useful for cancer prevention, but not treatment).
Edgar Cayce's diet (scientifically implausible), which prefers alkaline foods to acidic ones.
Juice fasting (scientifically implausible).
Electrical or physical treatments.
Orgone accumulators (fraud), a metal and cardboard box that the client sat in.
Magnet therapy (disproven), applying magnets to the body.
The Rife Machine (scientifically implausible, fraudulent), a radio frequency energy 'beam ray' tube machine.
Energy and psychological treatments.
Anti-cancer psychotherapy (disproven), claiming that a "cancer personality" caused cancer, which could be cured through talk therapy, e.g., that of the Simonton Cancer Center, Bernie Siegel's "Exceptional Cancer Patients" (ECaP) or Deepak Chopra.
Therapeutic touch (scientifically implausible), a type of energy therapy.
Imagining successful outcomes (scientifically implausible), such as visualizing cancer cells dying, in cancer guided imagery.
Psychic surgery, a sleight-of-hand confidence trick in which the practitioner pretends to remove a lump of tissue (typically raw animal entrails bought from a butcher) from a person.

Examples of complementary therapy

Acupuncture

Useful to control certain symptoms, but does not kill cancer cells.

Psychotherapy may reduce anxiety and improve quality of life.

Massage therapy may reduce pain

Alternative theories of cancer

Some alternative cancer treatments are based on unproven or disproven theories of how cancer begins or is sustained in the body. 

Some common concepts are :

Mind-body connection : This idea says that cancer forms because of, or can be controlled through, the person's mental and emotional state. 

Treatments based on this idea are mind–body interventions. 

Proponents say that cancer forms because the person is unhappy or stressed, or that a positive attitude can cure cancer after it has formed. 

A typical claim is that stress, anger, fear, or sadness depresses the immune system, whereas that love, forgiveness, confidence, and happiness cause the immune system to improve, and that this improved immune system will destroy the cancer. 

This belief is not supported by any scientific research : people with weak immune systems have about the same rate of cancer as people with healthy immune systems. 

In fact, many cancers require the support of an active immune system to establish the tumor microenvironment necessary for a tumor to grow.

Toxin theory of cancer: In this idea, the body's metabolic processes are overwhelmed by normal, everyday byproducts. 

These byproducts, called "toxins", are said to build up in the cells and cause cancer and other diseases through a process sometimes called autointoxication or autotoxemia. 

Treatments following this approach are usually aimed at detoxification or body cleansing, such as enemas.

Low activity by the immune system : This claim asserts that if only the immune system were strong enough, it would kill the "invading" or "foreign" cancer. 

Unfortunately, most cancer cells retain normal cell characteristics, making them appear to the immune system to be a normal part of the body. 

These treatments often focus on substance said to increase the immune system's activity.

Supposed situations within the body : In this idea, the body is incapable of coping with transient or local differences. 

For example, proponents will say that a transient lack of oxygen in a small area of the body causes cancer, or that clothing prevents normal circulation and thereby causes cancer.

Hypothetical microorganisms : While infections are a significant cause of certain kinds of cancer (e.g., Hepatitis B can cause liver cancer, and some human papillomaviruses cause cervical cancer), these stories usually assert that the harmless bacteria and fungi normally present in or on the body cause cancer, or that organisms only detectable by the proponent cause cancer.

Regulatory action

Government agencies around the world routinely investigate purported alternative cancer treatments in an effort to protect their citizens from fraud and abuse.

In 2.008, the United States Federal Trade Commission acted against companies that made unsupported claims that their products, some of which included highly toxic chemicals, could cure cancer.

Targets included Omega Supply, Native Essence Herb Company, Daniel Chapter One, Gemtronics, Inc., Herbs for Cancer, Nu-Gen Nutrition, Inc., Westberry Enterprises, Inc., Jim Clark’s All Natural Cancer Therapy, Bioque Technologies, Inc., Cleansing Time Pro, and Premium-essiac-tea-4less.

But do they care about people, or do they care about their money?

1 comment: